Probably his most famous contribution to experimental psychology was his
paper "On the rate of gain of information" (Hick, 1952), which
later became known as Hick's law, and widely depended upon in the
study of human information processing, for instance using the Jensen Box.

Probably his most famous contribution to experimental psychology was his paper "On the rate of gain of information" (Hick, 1952), which later became known as Hick's law, and widely depended upon in the study of human information processing, for instance using the Jensen Box.